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EVERYTHINGS BROKEN!! Can we get this 100+ year OLD Engine RUNNING again?? ANTIQUE ENGINE REVIVAL!!

what a gorgeous engine when its done! this is a 1910s 2 1/2hp lauson built for DeLaval. a lot of parts where broken and I managed to break several others. hope you guys enjoy!

Пікірлер: 289

  • @UpVoltageOverclocking
    @UpVoltageOverclockingАй бұрын

    As soon as he started hitting that valve with that hammer I knew it was gonna break!!

  • @trevorhaddox6884

    @trevorhaddox6884

    Ай бұрын

    tap-tap-tap-tap-tap CRACK Gasp!

  • @BrickEngines

    @BrickEngines

    Ай бұрын

    @@trevorhaddox6884villager sound emmited*

  • @cruddycornstalks

    @cruddycornstalks

    29 күн бұрын

    and already had a new one and it worked great. but its always funky to see a cast iron valve head just plain crumbly before you!

  • @rashton5730

    @rashton5730

    28 күн бұрын

    It took a hell of a beating, 😅 I'll have to send this video to Mortske Repair 😀

  • @martinhambleton5076
    @martinhambleton5076Ай бұрын

    The fastest valve grind i have ever seen.

  • @cruddycornstalks

    @cruddycornstalks

    Ай бұрын

    @@martinhambleton5076 fastest in the west

  • @thepotterer3726
    @thepotterer3726Ай бұрын

    Sorry, I had to stop watching when the adjustables came out.................................

  • @cruddycornstalks

    @cruddycornstalks

    Ай бұрын

    @@thepotterer3726 why do people hate a crescent wrench so much. If your rounding bolts off with one your using it wrong. They have easily enough grip to break the bolt before rounding it off so I still don't get why people hate them so much. They are a very useful tool that only novices say don't work especially in the old engine world.

  • @Davide0033

    @Davide0033

    Ай бұрын

    @@cruddycornstalks personally it's because it's big as fuck, it's easy to round bolt because they tend to have a lot of play and in general, they look like something that does the job badly i personally woun't use it, but i mean, it's not me working on that, and it clearly worked good enought to do the job. i think hammering straight into the valve might be worse than any wrench. again no hate, of course, i just want to discussion, but hammering into a stuck valve seems a good way to fuck stuff up

  • @rashton5730

    @rashton5730

    28 күн бұрын

    @@cruddycornstalks You should use 100 year old Peck, Stow & Wilcox monkey wrenches on your 100 year old engines 😄

  • @SiaVids
    @SiaVids28 күн бұрын

    You certainly got it going but obviously have a lot to learn on using the correct types of tools to correctly approach the job in hand. Something of this age requires an amount of respect.

  • @cruddycornstalks

    @cruddycornstalks

    28 күн бұрын

    @@SiaVids I agree and disagree at the same time I work on them damn near daily there is some respect to be had but a crescent wrench is plenty of respectful if you're careful with it. And this is a relatively common engine in the general spectrum of things so the only rare thing about it that is worth being really careful with is the paint job as there isn't a lot of nice originals like this left out there

  • @davidheidbrink1135
    @davidheidbrink1135Ай бұрын

    Somebody please take that hammer away and get him a set of wrenches, good grief!

  • @cruddycornstalks

    @cruddycornstalks

    Ай бұрын

    nothing wrong with any of the tools I'm using or my methods. they where calculated. maybe not perfectly but it was calculated.

  • @sagenspezl612
    @sagenspezl612Ай бұрын

    Hast Du kein Ordentliches Werkzeug?

  • @RayScrafield
    @RayScrafield24 күн бұрын

    Most folks don't know the correct way to use an adjustable wrench. I see them pulling against the moveable jaw all the time and that's what makes things go badly. Always pull against the fixed jaw.

  • @rc-daily
    @rc-dailyАй бұрын

    Lord have mercy... guy uses an adjustable wrench and you guys lose your minds.... who cares what tools he uses???

  • @nikolaivanov8208

    @nikolaivanov8208

    21 күн бұрын

    Imagine if he knows the right tools for the job.....

  • @minecraftnoob4273

    @minecraftnoob4273

    15 күн бұрын

    ​@@nikolaivanov8208 since he uses the adjustable wrench he doesn't have to have like 50 different wrenches

  • @minecraftnoob4273

    @minecraftnoob4273

    15 күн бұрын

    ​​@@nikolaivanov8208 And he has wrenches he just uses the adjustable wrench to save time going back and forth to the tool box and have to dig for the right size

  • @terryuland6502
    @terryuland6502Ай бұрын

    I was waiting on you to pull a Mortske and snap off the top of that valve …. And you did! Lol

  • @cruddycornstalks

    @cruddycornstalks

    29 күн бұрын

    the decision was calculated, but god I'm bad at math.

  • @MillwalltheCat
    @MillwalltheCat5 күн бұрын

    Probably one of the best 'oily rag' restorations I've come across. Great work.

  • @cruddycornstalks

    @cruddycornstalks

    5 күн бұрын

    @@MillwalltheCat glad you like it

  • @ASMRAntique1970

    @ASMRAntique1970

    19 сағат бұрын

    good job

  • @LymanTaiste
    @LymanTaisteАй бұрын

    What kind of heathen hammers a valve out? Adjustable wrench for everything?

  • @cruddycornstalks

    @cruddycornstalks

    Ай бұрын

    I guess I could have used mind powers instead. and yes adjustable hammer for everything

  • @MARRANCA2

    @MARRANCA2

    Ай бұрын

    Yeah. The adjustable wrench screams lazy or poor. Or both.

  • @cruddycornstalks

    @cruddycornstalks

    Ай бұрын

    @@MARRANCA2 if you think a crescent wrench is a bad tool you either Don't know how to use one or have never used one properly to begin with. There's no harm in in using a crescent wrench. If using it correctly you can snap the bolt off before it would ever round the head.

  • @MARRANCA2

    @MARRANCA2

    Ай бұрын

    BITCH PLEASE...I've been a Field Technician probably longer than you've been alive. But please...tell me about myself while you're using crap tools. Hahahaha. You're a joke.

  • @cruddycornstalks

    @cruddycornstalks

    24 күн бұрын

    a field technician isn't a hit and miss engine mechanic. between me and my father we have about 60 years in antique farm machinery repair, and we aren't going to tell you how to be a field technician , because there are almost completely unalike. if you haven't worked on antique engines maybe you shouldn't talk about how someone works on them.

  • @chrisacres
    @chrisacres23 күн бұрын

    So many experts popping up again.

  • @cruddycornstalks

    @cruddycornstalks

    20 күн бұрын

    everytime

  • @Q2kerS

    @Q2kerS

    5 күн бұрын

    You don't need to be an expert to understand that you shouldn't hit valves with a hammer.

  • @cruddycornstalks

    @cruddycornstalks

    5 күн бұрын

    @@Q2kerS you haven't worked on many stuck valves then.

  • @Q2kerS

    @Q2kerS

    4 күн бұрын

    @@cruddycornstalks worked on even worst, but in little bit different way

  • @brianrvd
    @brianrvdАй бұрын

    Rest in pieces, housing.

  • @tagomago2178
    @tagomago217825 күн бұрын

    Thought this was a spoof video at first, but no, it seems to be real. Thank you for putting the comedy back into mechanical restorations.

  • @cruddycornstalks

    @cruddycornstalks

    24 күн бұрын

    that's the same question I ask myself everyday!

  • @philippvonferrarikellerhof1720
    @philippvonferrarikellerhof172029 күн бұрын

    I quite like that you left the original paint on. It gives it a bit more character.

  • @cruddycornstalks

    @cruddycornstalks

    29 күн бұрын

    thanks! original paint is by far more expensive and harder to get then any repaint you can ever do to an engine. the decades of wear and age make a patina and color you cannot make from any spray can or brush! people that say otherwise don't respect a machines history or age. now if its been repainted its free game!

  • @philippephilou8116
    @philippephilou8116Ай бұрын

    You're starting from afar, but the result is superb, even with these little accidents, well done.

  • @cruddycornstalks

    @cruddycornstalks

    Ай бұрын

    @@philippephilou8116 thank you

  • @maxhammontree3169
    @maxhammontree316929 күн бұрын

    Bro, use more lube earlier, and not WD40! Pb blaster! I’ll send you a can. Fantastic job tho!

  • @cruddycornstalks

    @cruddycornstalks

    29 күн бұрын

    been tested by many people both perform very similar. and wd40 was on sale. and I always get like halfway through something and remember that penetrant exists and is helpful!

  • @maxhammontree3169

    @maxhammontree3169

    29 күн бұрын

    @@cruddycornstalks I’m an industrial mechanic for 20ish years, and I have the option to use WD 40 or PB, and it’ll be PB every time, and I even hate the smell of PB. It really works better.

  • @maxhammontree3169

    @maxhammontree3169

    29 күн бұрын

    WD is excellent for cleaning and light metal moisturizing.

  • @CrippleX89
    @CrippleX8913 күн бұрын

    Oh look, an engine that you can actually repair without patented tools and a computer that can only be reset by the manufacturer and is obsolete as soon as the manufacturer goes bankrupt

  • @cjgaming5544

    @cjgaming5544

    2 күн бұрын

    Well here in India most tractors are still fully mechanical . So sad that they will be like what you said in short amount of time 😢. And greeting me unemployed

  • @RayScrafield
    @RayScrafield24 күн бұрын

    I know nothing about these old "hit/miss" engines but my Dad would have loved watching your video. Very interesting. Well done.

  • @weschaffin
    @weschaffin24 күн бұрын

    Wow. I typically don’t watch videos this long in length but this one was well worth it

  • @rustyblade5845
    @rustyblade5845Ай бұрын

    I was just thinking when you was thrashing that valve, how come whenever I hit anything it breaks.

  • @cruddycornstalks

    @cruddycornstalks

    Ай бұрын

    the cast iron headed valves are always touchy. but I knew I had a way to replace it so I wasn't worried.

  • @rustyblade5845

    @rustyblade5845

    Ай бұрын

    @@cruddycornstalks monkey sees monkey does, this is the trouble. There is alot of young people who learn off KZread before they attempt. They copy these bad practices.

  • @squarefour1
    @squarefour1Ай бұрын

    Yep. Not only was he a goon with a Crescent Wrench but he held it backwards on the Nuts. Then used it for a hammer. Oh boy. Sure ran good. I don’t know how

  • @cruddycornstalks

    @cruddycornstalks

    Ай бұрын

    @@squarefour1 and what did it do? Nothing worked perfectly fine. No rounded heads no problems with the wrench what so ever but people still complain like it is causing problems. And it ran because I did the work it needed to run.

  • @danielgriffith7694
    @danielgriffith7694Ай бұрын

    If you don’t know how to do something right, please ask someone, before destroy it more 🤬

  • @cruddycornstalks

    @cruddycornstalks

    Ай бұрын

    @@danielgriffith7694 you can do that next time you work on one. Worked on hundreds of them. And handled some of the rarest out there so im good.

  • @igorchesalin3501
    @igorchesalin3501Ай бұрын

    Great job! Always enjoy watching your videos. So nice to see old machinery revived.

  • @cruddycornstalks

    @cruddycornstalks

    Ай бұрын

    @@igorchesalin3501 glad to hear it. Always try my best to entertain!

  • @sebastiansodini
    @sebastiansodiniАй бұрын

    Nunca me paso de ver una restauración tan mediocre, con golpes innecesarios al punto de romper una válvula, y nada prolijo al trabajar, una vergüenza como reparador

  • @alexferguson9283
    @alexferguson928326 күн бұрын

    Nice to see beautiful, well made and reliable machinery being bought back to life. Subscribed.

  • @Evilslayer73
    @Evilslayer7326 күн бұрын

    Amazing ressurection!! i love those ancient hit n miss engines:)

  • @bernhardhofstatter3129
    @bernhardhofstatter312924 күн бұрын

    What an expert 🙈

  • @cruddycornstalks

    @cruddycornstalks

    24 күн бұрын

    @@bernhardhofstatter3129 never claimed to be an expert but definitely delt with more of them then almost everyone commenting.

  • @michaelnovak4035
    @michaelnovak403521 күн бұрын

    You are a far better mechanic than I am. However, I'm disappointed that 1) you did not use sockets or at least open end wrenches to remove the nuts, 2) you didn't take the valve assembly to your anvil, and use something a bit less drastic to hit on the valve so it did not shatter, 3) once you had everything apart, you took each assembly to first a cleaning station to remove the old gunk, then to a sandblasting to make everything look at least clean. Yes, you were able to make the engine work again, and if that was your only goal, you accomplished that. I suppose I'm used to restoration folks totally cleaning, stripping, re lubing, and repainting everything so it looked nearly new. I suppose I was expecting more.

  • @cruddycornstalks

    @cruddycornstalks

    20 күн бұрын

    thank you. for once a polite and honest critique. but! 1) a crescent does no harm to any nut or bolt when used correctly and it didn't, as well as it fits some old bolts better then any socket will since they have rusted smaller over time and aren't standard anymore, 2) had no major care for saving the valve since I had replacements ready and it was bashed in hard from many people before me trying, 3) I cleaned the grease off generally and plan to clean it farther by hand, but I would never sand blast this engine or its parts as the paint and its patina is part of its history and far harder to obtain then any type of paint you can spray at it. it took that paint over a hundred year to get that way and people want to spend a few hours taking it off and putting something anyone can buy at a store on it, no thank you. I did a bunch of little mechanical reworking to remove slop and make the engine run as best as it can and succeeded . when it comes to antique farm machinery it is far more desirable to preserve the nice original paint, then "restore it" . if you have the paint to preserve. thank you for your comment and your thoughts!

  • @JasonSmith-vd1sz
    @JasonSmith-vd1szАй бұрын

    What a great little engine. Well done!

  • @cruddycornstalks

    @cruddycornstalks

    Ай бұрын

    @@JasonSmith-vd1sz thank you!

  • @1943L
    @1943LАй бұрын

    It’s a great little engine, made to last. After some TLC and a clean it seems to be as good as new.

  • @SharkRoads
    @SharkRoads25 күн бұрын

    This is not restoration 😅 This is tortureration 😂

  • @cruddycornstalks

    @cruddycornstalks

    25 күн бұрын

    @@SharkRoadssure don't seem like you have delt with very many hit and miss engines. Do some learning before you make assumptions. And it isn't a restoration never said it was. 90% of people call repainting and engine a restoration. And I find the word over used and useless.

  • @billchildress9756
    @billchildress9756Ай бұрын

    Bring back a lot of memories for me. When I was a teenager my friends Dad owned an antique shop and had a lot of old engines similar to this one and we started bringing them back and cleaning them up and getting to run again. This included some very old Tractors too!

  • @vicksman2023
    @vicksman20235 күн бұрын

    Wow great job getting the engine running...

  • @jscott8695
    @jscott869527 күн бұрын

    Well done! 🤣 Subscribed

  • @motorflusterer6307
    @motorflusterer630727 күн бұрын

    Well done, nice work, want to see it running with load...

  • @greenskullfarva
    @greenskullfarva21 күн бұрын

    It's like everyone with a craftsman starter kit suddenly thinks they can make a restoration video

  • @cruddycornstalks

    @cruddycornstalks

    20 күн бұрын

    if that's what you want to think, good for you. glad they include valve seat cutters , industrial welders, a lathe, a mill, valve grinder, magneto magnet charger, and all the other tools I used to make this engine run and to make this video. it wasn't a restoration I don't know where your getting that from. amazing how naïve some people can be about something they don't know much about. had a couple goals in the video get the engine running and get it running well as well as taking any slop out of all loose components and both where achieved and nothing was ruined or hurt that wasn't already bad or broken . "restoring" as a lot of KZread binge watchers say, would be a waste of what this engine is as a piece of history. I only want to preserve the patina the engine has while making it mechanically sound and tuning it till it runs as best it can. anyone complaining about my methods or what tools I used is either not experiences in antique engines or just a keyboard warrior looking for a argument to act like they know better. no nuts where rounded, no bolts striped, no good parts ruined, all original paint and history saved, and the engine runs better now than in the past 80+ years of its life. so maybe rethink your judgement.

  • @lm4278

    @lm4278

    7 күн бұрын

    @@cruddycornstalks i think you did a pretty good job. At first i was thinking you'd need to strip the remaining paint and sandblast. Glad you didn't. This old stuff was built to last. Great job repairing it. I knew a guy i used to work with years ago. He used to rebuild old engines like this and bigger. He had a big collection. Used to take them all over to fairs and shows. Pretty cool stuff. Keep up the good work. Subbed.

  • @KenthGustafsson300
    @KenthGustafsson300Ай бұрын

    Great video,,,no talk that takes of the intress to se it...thanks!

  • @cruddycornstalks

    @cruddycornstalks

    Ай бұрын

    thanks! i try to make the video as interesting as possible!

  • @BrentChristian-up9bt
    @BrentChristian-up9bt13 күн бұрын

    Yeah, maybe he doesn't have the best collection of tools, but he got it running.

  • @ShawnColorado
    @ShawnColoradoАй бұрын

    Great Video. I love seeing these old engines come back alive. I'm working on a John Deere now. Cracked magneto.

  • @cruddycornstalks

    @cruddycornstalks

    Ай бұрын

    @@ShawnColorado thanks! At least John deere mags are around. I was worried I wouldn't find another splitdorf but a friend found me one and I was saved. I didn't mention it in the video but the windings in mine where also bad so the parts one came it twice as handy.

  • @GuildOfCalamity
    @GuildOfCalamityАй бұрын

    Great pacing for the video! No one likes a bunch of talking and real-time unscrewing of bolts.

  • @cruddycornstalks

    @cruddycornstalks

    Ай бұрын

    gotta make taking out a bolt feel like pulling a pin otherwise, it makes the video way to slow and long!

  • @anthonyvincent5892

    @anthonyvincent5892

    Ай бұрын

    Speak for yourself!

  • @jfolck1886
    @jfolck188622 күн бұрын

    Watching you beat on that exhaust valve I was thinking to myself how is he not breaking that. I just hadn't given it enough time yet...

  • @elaref7225
    @elaref722519 күн бұрын

    I used to threaten my engineers with the sack if they used an adjustable spanner as their main tool. They can have their uses, but round off the corners of nuts at a high rate.

  • @cruddycornstalks

    @cruddycornstalks

    19 күн бұрын

    @@elaref7225 if your crescent wrench is rounding your nuts off you are using it wrong it will break the bolt it's on before rounding the head if you use them correctly

  • @elaref7225

    @elaref7225

    19 күн бұрын

    @@cruddycornstalks using them correctly is the problem My old boss was a patternmaker. When he started he company he supplied the machine setters, a toolkit of mallet, 10" adjustable & a tape measure. Most of the machine bolts were 6mm with heads for a 10mm spanner.. So, yes, they twisted the heads off on the odd occasion they adjusted it correctly!

  • @cruddycornstalks

    @cruddycornstalks

    19 күн бұрын

    @@elaref7225 yep. There should not be flak on the crescent wrench but the lack of using it correctly because I have never rounded a botl off with one ever unless someone gave me a cheap china wrench that would not stay tight

  • @nightrider5112
    @nightrider5112Ай бұрын

    I love old machines

  • @Mariano.Bernacki
    @Mariano.BernackiАй бұрын

    would this engine have some sort of intake air filter in service? can't see it lasting long without one, but am not knowledgeable so asking.

  • @cruddycornstalks

    @cruddycornstalks

    Ай бұрын

    @@Mariano.Bernacki basically no hit and miss engine had an air filter. They just sucked crud in and spar crud out. That's why you can find a lot of them completely worn out from inhaling corn dust and the like for decades.

  • @Goultek
    @Goultek19 күн бұрын

    I get the goose bumps every time I see someone using an adjustable wrench

  • @richardkitchen2469
    @richardkitchen2469Ай бұрын

    IF YOUR GOING TO TAKE THE TIME TO TEAR IT DOWN' A SMART PERSON WILL CLEAN ALL PARTS AND SAND BLAST THE WHOLE THING. THEN PROCEED TO DO A FILING FOR BLEMISHES. AND SURFACE SAND ALL THE SHAFTS.. AND YES I CRINGED WHEN THE HAMMER CAME OUT...

  • @cruddycornstalks

    @cruddycornstalks

    Ай бұрын

    @@richardkitchen2469 what sick person would sand blast something like this? Destroying all of the age and history it has and the original paint that's made it 110 plus years in the world. That sounds like someone that's never worked on preserving history very much. Let's save it by removing half of what makes it old and painting it with cheap paint that any one can put on anything, seems like a flawless plan. If you ever find an engine in this condition find someone else to save it because it sounds like you'd like to destroy half it's history.

  • @milwaukeeroadjim9253

    @milwaukeeroadjim9253

    25 күн бұрын

    Would you do that to an old shotgun or rifle as well? Asking for a friend.

  • @cruddycornstalks

    @cruddycornstalks

    25 күн бұрын

    @@milwaukeeroadjim9253 yeah you can't have any of that old bluing on there you need to fully redo that

  • @bayadere8308

    @bayadere8308

    21 күн бұрын

    It's worth bearing in mind that: a) he's entitled to do it any old way he pleases. b) purists are tiresome. c) you are anally retentive. Now, perhaps you can direct us to your restoration channel, I'm sure it's something to behold.

  • @christopherrobinkivisild5309
    @christopherrobinkivisild530926 күн бұрын

    I agree with some people, the last thing to use is adjustable wrench. But most of the people who watch this don't know how to restore an engine or the process of it.

  • @cruddycornstalks

    @cruddycornstalks

    26 күн бұрын

    @@christopherrobinkivisild5309 they sure seem like it's the worst thing to ever touch this engine like some of the nuts haven't been taken off with a chisel and hammer before.

  • @michaelm6364

    @michaelm6364

    15 күн бұрын

    Don't think he does either

  • @Michael-ul8bv
    @Michael-ul8bv24 күн бұрын

    The guy is a hack, broke a valve and that housing for the igniter. Watching him break things is too painful.

  • @cruddycornstalks

    @cruddycornstalks

    24 күн бұрын

    @@Michael-ul8bv good to know the person calling me a hack doesn't even know what I broke and what was already broken. Or the fact both had replacement parts waiting. Maybe go learn about something before you try to act like you know better.

  • @petersburgsummerresident2311
    @petersburgsummerresident2311Ай бұрын

    Меня бесит, когда разводными ключами работают!! Что нормальных нет????? 😡

  • @user-mh9sv9il5c

    @user-mh9sv9il5c

    20 күн бұрын

    Это математику нужно знать, ключи хитрые 7/8, 4/16 и т.д.

  • @adhdrebel982
    @adhdrebel982Ай бұрын

    When those were made those three tools were all the farmers had other than a big rock and first generation wrench🗜️

  • @cruddycornstalks

    @cruddycornstalks

    29 күн бұрын

    and here I'm destroying it using tools better then it ever had new!

  • @adhdrebel982

    @adhdrebel982

    29 күн бұрын

    @@cruddycornstalks my grandfather had one a third smaller it had a brass handle that when started folded into the flywheel . He had a washing machine water pump (think late 40s-early 50s) and a pair of pullies and old fan belt and he used it as an irrigation system for his trees , he showed me how to start it and it just popped along.

  • @karlmartell9279
    @karlmartell927918 сағат бұрын

    I think the Amish would accept this thing any more.

  • @AM-pl2pt
    @AM-pl2pt9 күн бұрын

    Are the bolts/nut non standard size so that an adjustable wrench has to be used?

  • @cruddycornstalks

    @cruddycornstalks

    9 күн бұрын

    @@AM-pl2pt someone finally gets it a bit. On these old engines alot of the bolts /nuts are called "large pattern" so in theory they should be one size larger then standard heads. But between a 100 years of rust and or abuse most are somewhere in between and it's safer and more reliable to use an adjustable wrench that will always go tight against what ever you put it on.

  • @Mercmad
    @MercmadАй бұрын

    I guess Delaval was the same company as Alfa laval ,which is familiar to me as makers of milk separators for dairy farmers. A huge company once. The little motor was typical on small farms for running the milking plant and separator.

  • @cruddycornstalks

    @cruddycornstalks

    Ай бұрын

    @@Mercmad it wasn't alpha laval it was alpha Delaval the whole time. The. It be same just DeLeval

  • @enginecrzy
    @enginecrzyАй бұрын

    Absolutely Beautiful Engine! I agree about the paint too, fantastic refurbishment as always.

  • @cruddycornstalks

    @cruddycornstalks

    Ай бұрын

    @@enginecrzy thank you! someday when I have more time down the line I'd love to get it completely spotless in the crankcase too but I had time restraints so I skipped that part.

  • @marty01957
    @marty0195719 күн бұрын

    Good job!

  • @joem1413
    @joem141326 күн бұрын

    I see from the comments you got a lot of flack, but you get my respect. I wouldn't know what it is or what to do with it.

  • @Larry-jv6he
    @Larry-jv6he21 күн бұрын

    awsome work sir.paint it pretty.

  • @georgebrown8312
    @georgebrown8312Ай бұрын

    Wow, that is amazing how you restored that old diesel engine to working order. It looks better and it works like a charm as well. Great work.

  • @erikziak1249

    @erikziak1249

    Ай бұрын

    Diesel? Did you even watch the video?

  • @Davide0033

    @Davide0033

    Ай бұрын

    @@erikziak1249 what i was thinking. that thing has a fucking carb lol

  • @Weimar76
    @Weimar7621 күн бұрын

    Das mucha "envidia buena" como decimos en el idioma español. Es muy divertido y gratificante poner a funcionar cosas antiguas; en mi casa tenemos un Renault 4 de 1977 que estuvo abandonado casi 15 años y ahora lo tenemos andando. Puede que técnicamente se puedan hacer las cosas mejor pero el trabajo que has hecho es muy bonito.

  • @GICK117
    @GICK117Ай бұрын

    Looks like you could do all that while your eyes were closed. Great job young man!

  • @cruddycornstalks

    @cruddycornstalks

    Ай бұрын

    @@GICK117 thank you! Ive got a pretty good idea I'd say.

  • @jamest.5001
    @jamest.500118 күн бұрын

    I want to build a similar enging from molten metal. Make lost foam castings , possibly some lodt pla using 3D prints. Then build a engine, to be used to generate power to charge batteries for a off grid home. NOT a replica.. more of a look at one of these, and say "Hey! I can build one of these!" Type of thing.. i have work on engines since I was a kid. But i want to actually cast and weld Making the parts for a engine. I would really like to build a few for different fuels. Build a steam engine to burn used engine oil in the boiler, id like to make it from stainless steel about the size of two 55 gallon drums on the outside. The inside, the actual boiler bring roughly the size of 1.5-1.7 , 40 gallon drums. Uses 1/2" plate, (two of them) drill (and ream) about 60 holes for the 1.25" stainless 18 gauge tubes. Placed in the steel end caps then wrapped eith a 1/4" sheet or possibly. 2-3 1/8" sheets. Eith the steam fully welded, (full penetration welds) then grind and Polish the area. And nickel plate ( heavily on the inside) weld in a ring about 1/2 x 1/2" with a groove for a copper o-ring, the ring inside the outer hoop of plate steel. Tig welded to kerp it in place and sealed. The o-ring seals the end plates. Them having oval holes to sccess the tubes. the fire box only about 12"-24" made from two layers of plate. A 1/4" plate with a 2" spacer, from 1/4" plate. Then another plate of 1/16" or 1/8" with several 2" pipes eith plugs, to allow the inner of the sides to be filled with fine sand, the inner most plated in nickel, with a 20 gauge stainless sheet metal deflector polished to reflect heat. With a 18 gauge sheet on top with holes matching the tubes or depend on the nickel plating. For protection. With a series of rings of tubes 1.5"-2" eith multiple 3/4" tubes coming from it. About 4"-6" long with a leaf blower connected to the big tube. it habing a Small piece of tubing inside with used oil under about 5-10 psi the tubing 3/8" with 3/16 pieces running up the 3/4-1" tubes with about 6-8 tiny holes neat the end of the 3/16" tube with bit plugged. The only outlet being the tiny holes them spraying into a 3/8-1/2" tube about 2" long. Making a nozzle anout 12 of them . With a tiny vhrst plug for each. With insulation protecting the wire, probably switch to nichrome wire, using the tubing as the conductor of current. With 12,v, 30 amps or so have a hot wire over the nozzle with the blower on low, slowly turn on the fuel, maybe use propane to start it. But the red hot wire should start thr oil. Slowly turn up the fuel to grt a fire, then the blower until it doesn't smoke. It should have 60-80 psi in no time. With the glame on a steel plate on a fire btick, for each nozzle, it should heat the fire box to near 1000°f with the tubes bring ,600°f (the air moving through them!) with the water ABOUT 300°-380° maybe run a steam pipe through the box to super heat the steam through a triple pass 2" pipe. Then to the stem engine. Hopefully enough to generate 3kw atleast, 750watts bring roughly 1hp, so 1.25×3=3.75 HP. With losses it vould require up to 7.5-8hp to produce 2800-3kw. Depending on losses and efficiency. A efficient generator could require as little as 4-4.5 hp i would like to produce up to 20 kw eventually, require up to 40 HP. That bring up the other engines, a gas or propane, wood gas engine. Having two cylinders with 8" bores and a12" stroke being a opposed cylinder engine , the balance should be great. Spin up to 1200 rpm max. But normally be 400-600 RPM. With the pistons both up at the same time , but giring one sfter the other. It should run near silent with the long stroke. Thr combustion should be over when the valve opens. Just a whoosh sound with the intake vslve opening just as the woosh is almost over. To help fill the cylinder with air fuel. Making more power. With roughly 9:1-10:1 compression, 2-3 times or more compression than the old engines had! Should produce more power. By about the same multiplier. A tiny 3.5 hp engine with a better cam, more compression, better fuel. 3.5 hp should get to 6-7 easily, the TQ should be greater atleast. And better balance should allow higher RPM is equivalent to much more power!!.... Sorry to ramble! Have a awesome day!

  • @NoName-gb9gp
    @NoName-gb9gp28 күн бұрын

    Never hamner a valve like that. 😮

  • @vinylexperience77

    @vinylexperience77

    28 күн бұрын

    Right!

  • @cruddycornstalks

    @cruddycornstalks

    24 күн бұрын

    I will be sure to use the Schwartz next time

  • @ahmedtounsi79
    @ahmedtounsi79Ай бұрын

    is this an 8 stroke engine !?

  • @GrahamHomes
    @GrahamHomes14 күн бұрын

    You redeemed yourself for me when you remagnetized magneto . Hammering te valve head was not a great start. You were lucky with the cast iron weld too .

  • @sovietrussian4977
    @sovietrussian4977Ай бұрын

    мотор Андижанец , до сих пор работает на водоотливных помпах в казахстане и ухбекистане и киргизии..

  • @tonyhaddon2582
    @tonyhaddon258226 күн бұрын

    How is it that you manage to spend so much time working on these oldies ?

  • @cruddycornstalks

    @cruddycornstalks

    24 күн бұрын

    no other social life or care for a sleep schedule

  • @vinylexperience77
    @vinylexperience7728 күн бұрын

    Did you put a lead substitute in the gas?

  • @cruddycornstalks

    @cruddycornstalks

    27 күн бұрын

    There is no need there's nothing in this engine sensitive enough to care nor in most engines from that time. The lead in fuel wasn't as much for a lubricant or dampener then it was an octane booster as there wasn't ever metal lead in gas only tetra ethyl lead and that has no major help over modern octane boosters and oils.

  • @vicvolk013
    @vicvolk01322 күн бұрын

    Me hubiera gustado verlo desmontado completo, aún así buen video

  • @williamllorens2141
    @williamllorens2141Ай бұрын

    If it works it’ll be a miracle. Lots of rusty components I apologize, it’s a miracle. It speaks volumes about the quality of the products built by master engineers ❤❤❤❤❤❤

  • @cruddycornstalks

    @cruddycornstalks

    Ай бұрын

    its is always amazing to see how well they hold up over the years!

  • @Capturing-Memories
    @Capturing-Memories16 күн бұрын

    Why it is not firing all the time, just occasionally?

  • @colin_5839
    @colin_583929 күн бұрын

    What did you use to clean the engine at the end there? Looks to have worked very well!

  • @cruddycornstalks

    @cruddycornstalks

    24 күн бұрын

    it was a 50 50 of gasoline and kerosene. worked best with the grease the engine had without making the green come off.

  • @franciscoassis2862
    @franciscoassis286229 күн бұрын

    Magnífico trabalho, parabéns, sem música de fundo chata ,muito bom mesmo

  • @cruddycornstalks

    @cruddycornstalks

    29 күн бұрын

    thank you!

  • @tronixfix
    @tronixfixАй бұрын

    Those “pot metal” parts are quite toxic… it’s usually a mixture of zinc, lead and aluminium. The ratio of metals can vary, that’s why some batches last and others rot away.

  • @cruddycornstalks

    @cruddycornstalks

    Ай бұрын

    Yep never heat them very hot with a torch or you could get zinc poisoning

  • @petersburgsummerresident2311
    @petersburgsummerresident2311Ай бұрын

    Понятно.. Зарубежные механики слабы в технике... Сказывается западное образование😢

  • @vinylexperience77
    @vinylexperience7728 күн бұрын

    WD-40 is not a penetrating oil. Never, Never, Never hammer a valve like that! FYI

  • @cruddycornstalks

    @cruddycornstalks

    28 күн бұрын

    @@vinylexperience77 wd-40 is as much of a penetrant most brands. And if you can't hammer the valve Guess I should have just cut it off from the get go.

  • @vinylexperience77

    @vinylexperience77

    28 күн бұрын

    @@cruddycornstalks wrong

  • @cruddycornstalks

    @cruddycornstalks

    28 күн бұрын

    @@vinylexperience77 been tested by dozens of people that almost all main stream penetrating oil works pretty much the same so not wrong. Acetone and transmission fluid works better then almost all of them and heat beat them all my a mile but if you head a stem like that that guide will split almost always.

  • @enginecrzy
    @enginecrzyАй бұрын

    DON'T BREAK THE VAL😐...😑...😁✌👍

  • @cruddycornstalks

    @cruddycornstalks

    Ай бұрын

    @@enginecrzy aaaannd it's gone.

  • @zakaria1514z
    @zakaria1514z28 күн бұрын

    Great job awesome

  • @cruddycornstalks

    @cruddycornstalks

    24 күн бұрын

    Thanks!

  • @mcburcke
    @mcburcke22 күн бұрын

    He needs a stock tank full of EvapoRust to dunk that thing in...

  • @patricklamanna3924
    @patricklamanna3924Ай бұрын

    Never seen anyone belt a valve like that

  • @cruddycornstalks

    @cruddycornstalks

    29 күн бұрын

    a few before me had wacked on it for a good minute the stem was crushed to almost twice its thickness. so I had a replacement in line and had no reason to worry about breaking it, though it wasn't really expected. but hoh boy do people seem mad that I broke a valve that I had a replacement for ! and they seem to act like they know how to fix the world!

  • @Sandwiches2713
    @Sandwiches271327 күн бұрын

    Nice

  • @cruddycornstalks

    @cruddycornstalks

    24 күн бұрын

    thanks

  • @koningbolo4700
    @koningbolo470028 күн бұрын

    Cool to have this machine powering an alternator or something slightly more period to produce power to charge an Edison battery...

  • @ilfarmboy
    @ilfarmboyАй бұрын

    good job just needs a muffler

  • @alex4alexn
    @alex4alexn29 күн бұрын

    new sub here, great rebuild, keep rebuilding and i will be back for sure, thanks for the content. Just a tiny bit of advise, flood the hell out of your camera shots with lighting for fine detail. Thanks again for the rebuild!

  • @rodrigoolvera5983
    @rodrigoolvera598327 күн бұрын

    He visto dos motores asi en un antiguo sistema de bombeo para agua potable, uno es LISTER y el otro creo que es Fairbanks Morse aunque esta ultima también fabricaban bombas y motores eléctricos verticales

  • @RattiDave
    @RattiDaveАй бұрын

    I'd recommend having that green paint checked for arsenic content, just in case …

  • @cruddycornstalks

    @cruddycornstalks

    Ай бұрын

    @@RattiDave licked it. Seemed ok

  • @Technoismystyle17
    @Technoismystyle17Ай бұрын

    nice video but did you clean the cylinder and piston ?

  • @cruddycornstalks

    @cruddycornstalks

    Ай бұрын

    @@Technoismystyle17 i removed the large chunks other wise that was all it needed. Rings must not have been stuck or it would have run very good.

  • @jorgemoraga2427
    @jorgemoraga242727 күн бұрын

    Nunca vi martillar una valvula con tal brutalidad , ....como para llevarle el carro jajaja

  • @bobvarrica5541
    @bobvarrica5541Ай бұрын

    Diden't hone the cylinder or check for stuck rings?

  • @cruddycornstalks

    @cruddycornstalks

    Ай бұрын

    @@bobvarrica5541 if it has good compression without , no need.

  • @jimbritt2874
    @jimbritt2874Ай бұрын

    Very nice job 👍👍🇺🇲

  • @cruddycornstalks

    @cruddycornstalks

    Ай бұрын

    @@jimbritt2874 thank you

  • @ttff4459
    @ttff445925 күн бұрын

    Treat yourself to a socket set FFS.

  • @christolbert4628
    @christolbert4628Ай бұрын

    A friend of mine has a few "hit and miss" antique engines.

  • @josephhammond5219
    @josephhammond5219Ай бұрын

    I guess it was really to far gone to do a proper restore? Not doggen you Sir just my observation. I gave you a like for your effort.

  • @cruddycornstalks

    @cruddycornstalks

    29 күн бұрын

    thank you!

  • @DIY-vv4fu
    @DIY-vv4fuАй бұрын

    Abroad, it is mechanical respiration. good.

  • @carlrudd1858
    @carlrudd185820 күн бұрын

    Could have told you the valve would shatter. That's NOT how you do it. But otherwise, I enjoyed it.

  • @davidhobman399
    @davidhobman3997 күн бұрын

    I have restored many engines in worse condition than this one using time and patience. I have never seen an engine as brutally treated as things one, shame on you.

  • @garyhuss8728
    @garyhuss8728Ай бұрын

    That's a cool old engine, got an IH LA engine myself, but I cringe when you break out the crescent wrench and hammer, if you would take the time to use the proper tools and leave the hammer in the toolbox you would save yourself a lot of headaches

  • @cruddycornstalks

    @cruddycornstalks

    Ай бұрын

    I don't know what people expect you to get the valve out with other then a hammer. A press would have a good chance of breaking a cast iron head valve and or bending it as well. And only people that don't know how to use an adjustable wrench don't like an adjustable wrench.

  • @Stemenik
    @Stemenik26 күн бұрын

    So strange, after the 163rd hard hammer hit the valve went off in pieces...

  • @cruddycornstalks

    @cruddycornstalks

    24 күн бұрын

    who could have foreseen such wizardry .

  • @reuben9213
    @reuben9213Ай бұрын

    You want people to subscribe ? You need to use the proper tools sir . Do you know what a deadblow is ? Never use a metal hammer . Take advise from a lot of your comments . If you don't know don't be afraid to ask . We won't make fun of you . We will feel good that you take the time to inquire . The stupid question is the one not ask . Remember that . . .

  • @cruddycornstalks

    @cruddycornstalks

    Ай бұрын

    @@reuben9213 dead blow wouldn't and didn't touch that valve, been there tried that. And I had a replacement so I wasn't worried. Any one that says something about a crescent wrench hasn't learned how to use one, or only ever used cheap ones. The comments are only seeing a miniscule amount of what I did and or what I thought about doing. And most seem to think they know how working on antique engines is without ever touching one or two if any at all. Not my first or my last engine I worked on. Worked on hundreds of not thousands before and will work on many more.

  • @theboots39

    @theboots39

    22 күн бұрын

    Man, a lot of the comments here are pretty obnoxious, but this has got to be the most patronizing. You might have reasonable advice here, but nobody would listen to it because it was delivered this way.

  • @cruddycornstalks

    @cruddycornstalks

    22 күн бұрын

    @@theboots39 I work on engines a lot and have engine people as coworkers and love showing the random comments to them at lunch it's a way to pass the time. People are more prone to comment if they don't enjoy the video then if they do so the comments can always get a little annoying but we make it as bearable as possible and try to respond to some of them for the most part genuinely though after 15 or so you get a bit sassy about it. either way doesn't bug me much other then the fact they would rather complain then do something productive.

  • @morganlang6973

    @morganlang6973

    22 күн бұрын

    Hi is a idiot 😂

  • @cptdavepilm3235
    @cptdavepilm3235Ай бұрын

    Subbed, Quick, no bullshit rebuild, so many people nowadays are scared of elbow grease, and treat things like they are made of wet toilet paper. good job

  • @cruddycornstalks

    @cruddycornstalks

    29 күн бұрын

    thanks for the sub! a lot of people act like its a delicate machine but in reality its a 300lb cast iron brick with some bit on the outside